Madrid, Feb 8, 2026, 00:17 CET — Market’s done for the day.
Banco Santander, S.A. (SAN.MC) finished Friday’s session in Madrid up 1.85% at 10.66 euros. Next week, capital moves could end up having a bigger say in the stock’s direction than routine trading noise. 1
The rebound is key. Santander’s juggling two priorities: snapping up U.S. growth and making sure shareholders keep seeing cash returns. That mix? It can flip fast if anything from funding costs to regulatory pressures or share dilution moves the wrong way.
The window for signals is narrow. Traders scan for signs—maybe buybacks losing steam, a shift in dividend plans, or management suddenly sounding firmer about holding on to capital.
Santander, in a Feb. 4 inside-information filing, said it kicked off a roughly €5.03 billion share buyback, eyeing a possible wrap by July 21, with Goldman Sachs International on execution. Of that sum, €1.83 billion—about 25% of second-half 2025 underlying profit—is earmarked, while €3.2 billion ties back to CET1 capital, following the sale of a 49% stake in Santander Bank Polska to Erste Group. The board gets the final 2025 cash dividend proposal on Feb. 24, Santander noted, also cautioning that the buyback might need to pause around Webster’s shareholder meeting, since Santander shares are tied up in the transaction.
Earlier this week, Santander signed off on a $12.2 billion acquisition of U.S. regional lender Webster Financial, eyeing about $800 million in cost synergies and aiming to crack the top 10 spot among U.S. retail and commercial banks by assets. Executive chair Ana Botín called the move a way to “strengthen scale and profitability and lower funding costs” in the U.S. The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026. 2
The Webster announcement is stirring up old worries about execution risk and dilution. Reuters flagged that the deal’s setup points to a capital increase near 3.5 billion euros, highlighting skepticism about whether cost synergies might end up eroding revenue; Barclays analysts expect Santander’s U.S. return on tangible equity (ROTE) — that’s their key profitability gauge — could climb to roughly 18% by 2028, up from 10.8%. For Germán López, banking professor at Spain’s IESE business school, the strategy boils down to one thing: in the U.S., “either you gain scale … or you leave the country.” 3
Another risk is brewing in the UK. Santander UK bumped its motor finance redress provision up to 461 million pounds, responding to the Financial Conduct Authority’s consultation on a possible compensation program. The bank flagged “significant uncertainty” about where things go from here. Complaints tied to Santander’s car finance segment have been frozen until May 2026. 4
Friday’s mood was constructive. European banks climbed 1.4%, while the STOXX 600 put on 0.9%—broad bounce, relief for lenders after choppy results and a swirl of rate talk. 5
Santander is pointing to robust full-year results to back up its strategy. The bank posted a 12% rise in attributable profit for 2025, reaching €14.1 billion, and said customer numbers climbed by eight million to 180 million. Botín highlighted gains in customer experience and lower cost-to-serve, as Santander managed to bring down its cost-to-income ratio over the past three years. 6
Looking ahead, Santander’s Investor Day lands Feb. 25, followed by its Q1 earnings call on April 29. The focus: how the bank lays out its capital plans, plus whether it signals capacity for a major U.S. acquisition alongside a hefty buyback. 7